Generation of plants with altered oil content

- Agrinomics LLC

The present invention is directed to plants that display an altered oil content phenotype due to altered expression of a HIO nucleic acid. The invention is further directed to methods of generating plants with an altered oil content phenotype.

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Description
CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application the U.S. National Stage of International Application No. PCT/US2005/022970, filed Jun. 28, 2005, which was published in English under. PCT Article 21(2), which in turn claims to the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/585,495, filed Jul. 2, 2004, the contents of both of which are hereby incorporated by reference.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

The ability to manipulate the composition of crop seeds, particularly the content and composition of seed oils, has important applications in the agricultural industries, relating both to processed food oils and to oils for animal feeding. Seeds of agricultural crops contain a variety of valuable constituents, including oil, protein and starch. Industrial processing can separate some or all of these constituents for individual sale in specific applications. For instance, nearly 60% of the U.S. soybean crop is crushed by the soy processing industry. Soy processing yields 0 purified oil, which is sold at high value, while the remainder is sold principally for lower value livestock feed (US Soybean Board, 2001 Soy Stats). Canola seed is crushed to produce oil and the co-product canola meal (Canola Council of Canada). Nearly 20% of the 1999/2000 US corn crop was industrially refined, primarily for production of starch, ethanol and oil (Corn Refiners Association). Thus, it is often desirable to maximize oil content of seeds. For instance, for processed oilseeds such as soy and canola, increasing the absolute oil content of the seed will increase the value of such grains. For processed corn it may be desired to either increase or decrease oil content, depending on utilization of other major constituents. Decreasing oil may improve the quality of isolated starch by reducing undesired flavors associated with oil oxidation. Alternatively, in ethanol production, where flavor is unimportant, increasing oil content may increase overall value. In many feed grains, such as corn and wheat, it is desirable to increase seed oil content, because oil has higher energy content than other seed constituents such as carbohydrate. Oilseed processing, like most grain processing businesses, is a capital-intensive business; thus small shifts in the distribution of products from the low valued components to the high value oil component can have substantial economic impacts for grain processors.

Biotechnological manipulation of oils can provide compositional alteration and improvement of oil yield. Compositional alterations include high oleic soybean and corn oil (U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,229,033 and 6,248,939), and laurate-containing seeds (U.S. Pat. No. 5,639,790), among others. Work in compositional alteration has predominantly focused on processed oilseeds but has been readily extendable to non-oilseed crops, including corn. While there is considerable interest in increasing oil content, the only currently practiced biotechnology in this area is High Oil Corn (HOC) technology (DuPont, U.S. Pat. No. 5,704,160). HOC employs high oil pollinators developed by classical selection breeding along with elite (male-sterile) hybrid females in a production system referred to as TopCross. The TopCross High Oil system raises harvested grain oil content in maize from about 3.5% to about 7%, improving the energy content of the grain.

While it has been fruitful, the HOC production system has inherent limitations. First, the system of having a low percentage of pollinators responsible for an entire field's seed set contains inherent risks, particularly in drought years. Second, oil contents in current HOC fields have plateaued at about 9% oil. Finally, high-oil corn is not primarily a biochemical change, but rather an anatomical mutant (increased embryo size) that has the indirect result of increasing oil content. For these reasons, an alternative high oil strategy, particularly one that derives from an altered biochemical output, would be especially valuable.

The most obvious target crops for the processed oil market are soy and rapeseed, and a large body of commercial work (e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,544; PCT application WO9411516) demonstrates that Arabidopsis is an excellent model for oil metabolism in these crops. Biochemical screens of seed oil composition have identified Arabidopsis genes for many critical biosynthetic enzymes and have led to identification of agronomically important gene orthologs. For instance, screens using chemically mutagenized populations have identified lipid mutants whose seeds display altered fatty acid composition (Lemieux et al., 1990; James and Dooner, 1990). T-DNA mutagenesis screens (Feldmann et al., 1989) that detected altered fatty acid composition identified the omega 3 desaturase (FAD3) and delta-12 desaturase (FAD2) genes (U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,544; Yadav et al., 1993; Okuley et al., 1994). A screen which focused on oil content rather than oil quality, analyzed chemically-induced mutants for wrinkled seeds or altered seed density, from which altered seed oil content was inferred (Focks and Benning, 1998). Another screen, designed to identify enzymes involved in production of very long chain fatty acids, identified a mutation in the gene encoding a diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT) as being responsible for reduced triacyl glycerol accumulation in seeds (Katavic V et al, 1995). It was further shown that seed-specific over-expression of the DGAT cDNA was associated with increased seed oil content (Jako et al., 2001).

Activation tagging in plants refers to a method of generating random mutations by insertion of a heterologous nucleic acid construct comprising regulatory sequences (e.g., an enhancer) into a plant genome. The regulatory sequences can act to enhance transcription of one or more native plant genes; accordingly, activation tagging is a fruitful method for generating gain-of-function, generally dominant mutants (see, e.g., Hayashi et al., 1992; Weigel D et al. 2000). The inserted construct provides a molecular tag for rapid identification of the native plant whose mis-expression causes the mutant phenotype. Activation tagging may also cause loss-of-function phenotypes. The insertion may result in disruption of a native plant gene, in which case the phenotype is generally recessive.

Activation tagging has been used in various species, including tobacco and Arabidopsis, to identify many different kinds of mutant phenotypes and the genes associated with these phenotypes (Wilson et al., 1996, Schaffer et al., 1998, Fridborg et al., 1999; Kardailsky et al., 1999; Christensen S et al., 1998).

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

The invention provides a transgenic plant having a high oil phenotype. The transgenic plant comprises a transformation vector comprising a nucleotide sequence that encodes or is complementary to a sequence that encodes a High Oil (hereinafter “HIO”) polypeptide. In preferred embodiments, the transgenic plant is selected from the group consisting of rapeseed, soy, corn, sunflower, cotton, cocoa, safflower, oil palm, coconut palm, flax, castor and peanut. The invention further provides a method of producing oil comprising growing the transgenic plant and recovering oil from said plant.

The invention also provides a transgenic plant cell having a high oil phenotype. The transgenic plant cell comprises a transformation vector comprising a nucleotide sequence that encodes or is complementary to a sequence that encodes a HIO polypeptide. In preferred embodiments, the transgenic plant cell is selected from the group consisting of rapeseed, soy, corn, sunflower, cotton, cocoa, safflower, oil palm, coconut palm, flax, castor and peanut. In other embodiments, the plant cell is a seed, pollen, propagule, or embryo cell. The invention further provides feed, meal, grain, food, or seed comprising a nucleic acid sequence that encodes a HIO polypeptide. The invention also provides feed, meal, grain, food, or seed comprising the HIO polypeptide, or an ortholog thereof.

The transgenic plant of the invention is produced by a method that comprises introducing into progenitor cells of the plant a plant transformation vector comprising a nucleotide sequence that encodes or is complementary to a sequence that encodes an HIO polypeptide, and growing the transformed progenitor cells to produce a transgenic plant, wherein the HIO polynucleotide sequence is expressed causing the high oil phenotype. The invention further provides plant cells obtained from said transgenic plant.

The present invention also provides a container of over about 10,000, more preferably about 20,000, and even more preferably about 40,000 seeds where over about 10%, more preferably about 25%, more preferably about 50%, and even more preferably about 75% or more preferably about 90% of the seeds are seeds derived from a plant of the present invention.

The present invention also provides a container of over about 10 kg, more preferably about 25 kg, and even more preferably about 50 kg seeds where over about 10%, more preferably about 25%, more preferably about 50%, and even more preferably about 75% or more preferably about 90% of the seeds are seeds derived from a plant of the present invention.

Any of the plants or parts thereof of the present invention may be processed to produce a feed, food, meal, or oil preparation. A particularly preferred plant part for this purpose is a seed. In a preferred embodiment the feed, food, meal, or oil preparation is designed for ruminant animals. Methods to produce feed, food, meal, and oil preparations are known in the art. See, for example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,957,748; 5,100,679; 5,219,596; 5,936,069; 6,005,076; 6,146,669; and 6,156,227. The meal of the present invention may be blended with other meals. In a preferred embodiment, the meal produced from plants of the present invention or generated by a method of the present invention constitutes greater than about 0.5%, about 1%, about 5%, about 10%, about 250%, about 50%, about 75%, or about 90% by volume or weight of the meal component of any product. In another embodiment, the meal preparation may be blended and can constitute greater than about 10%, about 25%, about 35%, about 50%, or about 75% of the blend by volume.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION Definitions

Unless otherwise indicated, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as they would to one skilled in the art of the present invention. Practitioners are particularly directed to Sambrook et al., 1989, and Ausubel F M et al., 1993, for definitions and terms of the art. It is to be understood that this invention is not limited to the particular methodology, protocols, and reagents described, as these may vary.

As used herein, the term “vector” refers to a nucleic acid construct designed for transfer between different host cells. An “expression vector” refers to a vector that has the ability to incorporate and express heterologous DNA fragments in a foreign cell. Many prokaryotic and eukaryotic expression vectors are commercially available. Selection of appropriate expression vectors is within the knowledge of those having skill in the art.

A “heterologous” nucleic acid construct or sequence has a portion of the sequence that is not native to the plant cell in which it is expressed. Heterologous, with respect to a control sequence refers to a control sequence (i.e. promoter or enhancer) that does not function in nature to regulate the same gene the expression of which it is currently regulating. Generally, heterologous nucleic acid sequences are not endogenous to the cell or part of the genome in which they are present, and have been added to the cell, by infection, transfection, microinjection, electroporation, or the like. A “heterologous” nucleic acid construct may contain a control sequence/DNA coding sequence combination that is the same as, or different from a control sequence/DNA coding sequence combination found in the native plant.

As used herein, the term “gene” means the segment of DNA involved in producing a polypeptide chain, which may or may not include regions preceding and following the coding region, e.g. 5′ untranslated (5′ UT) or “leader” sequences and 3′ UTR or “trailer” sequences, as well as intervening sequences (introns) between individual coding segments (exons) and non-transcribed regulatory sequence.

As used herein, “recombinant” includes reference to a cell or vector, that has been modified by the introduction of a heterologous nucleic acid sequence or that the cell is derived from a cell so modified. Thus, for example, recombinant cells express genes that are not found in identical form within the native (non-recombinant) form of the cell or express native genes that are otherwise abnormally expressed, under expressed or not expressed at all as a result of deliberate human intervention.

As used herein, the term “gene expression” refers to the process by which a polypeptide is produced based on the nucleic acid sequence of a gene. The process includes both transcription and translation; accordingly, “expression” may refer to either a polynucleotide or polypeptide sequence, or both. Sometimes, expression of a polynucleotide sequence will not lead to protein translation. “Over-expression” refers to increased expression of a polynucleotide and/or polypeptide sequence relative to its expression in a wild-type (or other reference [e.g., non-transgenic]) plant and may relate to a naturally-occurring or non-naturally occurring sequence. “Ectopic expression” refers to expression at a time, place, and/or increased level that does not naturally occur in the non-altered or wild-type plant. “Under-expression” refers to decreased expression of a polynucleotide and/or polypeptide sequence, generally of an endogenous gene, relative to its expression in a wild-type plant. The terms “mis-expression” and “altered expression” encompass over-expression, under-expression, and ectopic expression.

The term “introduced” in the context of inserting a nucleic acid sequence into a cell, means “transfection”, or “transformation” or “transduction” and includes reference to the incorporation of a nucleic acid sequence into a eukraryotic or prokaryotic cell where the nucleic acid sequence may be incorporated into the genome of the cell (for example, chromosome, plasmid, plastid, or mitochondrial DNA), converted into an autonomous replicon, or transiently expressed (for example, transfected mRNA).

As used herein, a “plant cell” refers to any cell derived from a plant, including cells from undifferentiated tissue (e.g., callus) as well as plant seeds, pollen, propagules and embryos.

As used herein, the terms “native” and “wild-type” relative to a given plant trait or phenotype refers to the form in which that trait or phenotype is found in the same variety of plant in nature.

As used herein, the term “modified” regarding a plant trait, refers to a change in the phenotype of a transgenic plant relative to the similar non-transgenic plant. An “interesting phenotype (trait)” with reference to a transgenic plant refers to an observable or measurable phenotype demonstrated by a T1 and/or subsequent generation plant, which is not displayed by the corresponding non-transgenic (i.e., a genotypically similar plant that has been raised or assayed under similar conditions). An interesting phenotype may represent an improvement in the plant or may provide a means to produce improvements in other plants. An “improvement” is a feature that may enhance the utility of a plant species or variety by providing the plant with a unique and/or novel quality. An “altered oil content phenotype” refers to measurable phenotype of a genetically modified plant, where the plant displays a statistically significant increase or decrease in overall oil content (i.e., the percentage of seed mass that is oil), as compared to the similar, but non-modified plant. A high oil phenotype refers to an increase in overall oil content.

As used herein, a “mutant” polynucleotide sequence or gene differs from the corresponding wild type polynucleotide sequence or gene either in terms of sequence or expression, where the difference contributes to a modified plant phenotype or trait. Relative to a plant or plant line, the term “mutant” refers to a plant or plant line which has a modified plant phenotype or trait, where the modified phenotype or trait is associated with the modified expression of a wild type polynucleotide sequence or gene.

As used herein, the term “T1” refers to the generation of plants from the seed of T0 plants. The T1 generation is the first set of transformed plants that can be selected by application of a selection agent, e.g., an antibiotic or herbicide, for which the transgenic plant contains the corresponding resistance gene. The term “T2” refers to the generation of plants by self-fertilization of the flowers of T1 plants, previously selected as being transgenic. T3 plants are generated from T2 plants, etc. As used herein, the “direct progeny” of a given plant derives from the seed (or, sometimes, other tissue) of that plant and is in the immediately subsequent generation; for instance, for a given lineage, a T2 plant is the direct progeny of a T1 plant. The “indirect progeny” of a given plant derives from the seed (or other tissue) of the direct progeny of that plant, or from the seed (or other tissue) of subsequent generations in that lineage; for instance, a T3 plant is the indirect progeny of a T1 plant.

As used herein, the term “plant part” includes any plant organ or tissue, including, without limitation, seeds, embryos, meristematic regions, callus tissue, leaves, roots, shoots, gametophytes, sporophytes, pollen, and microspores. Plant cells can be obtained from any plant organ or tissue and cultures prepared therefrom. The class of plants which can be used in the methods of the present invention is generally as broad as the class of higher plants amenable to transformation techniques, including both monocotyledenous and dicotyledenous plants.

As used herein, “transgenic plant” includes a plant that comprises within its genome a heterologous polynucleotide. The heterologous polynucleotide can be either stably integrated into the genome, or can be extra-chromosomal. Preferably, the polynucleotide of the present invention is stably integrated into the genome such that the polynucleotide is passed on to successive generations. A plant cell, tissue, organ, or plant into which the heterologous polynucleotides have been introduced is considered “transformed”, “transfected”, or “transgenic”. Direct and indirect progeny of transformed plants or plant cells that also contain the heterologous polynucleotide are also considered transgenic.

Various methods for the introduction of a desired polynucleotide sequence encoding the desired protein into plant cells are available and known to those of skill in the art and include, but are not limited to: (1) physical methods such as microinjection, electroporation, and microprojectile mediated delivery (biolistics or gene gun technology); (2) virus mediated delivery methods; and (3) Agrobacterium-mediated transformation methods.

The most commonly used methods for transformation of plant cells are the Agrobacterium-mediated DNA transfer process and the biolistics or microprojectile bombardment mediated process (i.e., the gene gun). Typically, nuclear transformation is desired but where it is desirable to specifically transform plastids, such as chloroplasts or amyloplasts, plant plastids may be transformed utilizing a microprojectile-mediated delivery of the desired polynucleotide.

Agrobacterium-mediated transformation is achieved through the use of a genetically engineered soil bacterium belonging to the genus Agrobacterium. A number of wild-type and disarmed strains of Agrobacterium trumefaciens and Agrobacterium rhizogenes harboring Ti or Ri plasmids can be used for gene transfer into plants. Gene transfer is done via the transfer of a specific DNA known as “T-DNA” that can be genetically engineered to carry any desired piece of DNA into many plant species.

Agrobacterium-mediated genetic transformation of plants involves several steps. The first step, in which the virulent Agrobacterium and plant cells are first brought into contact with each other, is generally called “inoculation”. Following the inoculation, the Agrobacterium and plant cells/tissues are permitted to be grown together for a period of several hours to several days or more under conditions suitable for growth and T-DNA transfer. This step is termed “co-culture”. Following co-culture and T-DNA delivery, the plant cells are treated with bactericidal or bacteriostatic agents to kill the Agrobacterium remaining in contact with the explant and/or in the vessel containing the explant. If this is done in the absence of any selective agents to promote preferential growth of transgenic versus non-transgenic plant cells, then this is typically referred to as the “delay” step. If done in the presence of selective pressure favoring transgenic plant cells, then it is referred to as a “selection” step. When a “delay” is used, it is typically followed by one or more “selection” steps.

With respect to microprojectile bombardment (U.S. Pat. No. 5,550,318 (Adams et al.); U.S. Pat. No. 5,538,880 (Lundquist et. al.), U.S. Pat. No. 5,610,042 (Chang et al.); and PCT Publication WO 95/06128 (Adams et al.); each of which is specifically incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), particles are coated with nucleic acids and delivered into cells by a propelling force. Exemplary particles include those comprised of tungsten, platinum, and preferably, gold.

An illustrative embodiment of a method for delivering DNA into plant cells by acceleration is the Biolistics Particle Delivery System (BioRad, Hercules, Calif.), which can be used to propel particles coated with DNA or cells through a screen, such as a stainless steel or Nytex screen, onto a filter surface covered with monocot plant cells cultured in suspension.

Microprojectile bombardment techniques are widely applicable, and may be used to transform virtually any plant species. Examples of species that have been transformed by microprojectile bombardment include monocot species such as maize (International Publication No. WO 95/06128 (Adams et al.)), barley, wheat (U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,055 (Townsend et al) incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), rice, oat, rye, sugarcane, and sorghum; as well as a number of dicots including tobacco, soybean (U.S. Pat. No. 5,322,783 (Tomes et al.), incorporated herein by reference in its entirety), sunflower, peanut, cotton, tomato, and legumes in general (U.S. Pat. No. 5,563,055 (Townsend et al.) incorporated herein by reference in its entirety).

To select or score for transformed plant cells regardless of transformation methodology, the DNA introduced into the cell contains a gene that functions in a regenerable plant tissue to produce a compound that confers upon the plant tissue resistance to an otherwise toxic compound. Genes of interest for use as a selectable, screenable, or scorable marker would include but are not limited to GUS, green fluorescent protein (GFP), luciferase (LUX, antibiotic or herbicide tolerance genes. Examples of antibiotic resistance genes include the penicillins, kanamycin (and neomycin, G418, bleomycin); methotrexate (and trimethoprim); chloramphenicol; kanamycin and tetracycline. Polynucleotide molecules encoding proteins involved in herbicide tolerance are known in the art and include, but are not limited to a polynucleotide molecule encoding 5-enolpyruvylshikimate-3-phosphate synthase (EPSPS) described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,627,061 (Barry, et al.), U.S. Pat. No. 5,633,435 (Barry, et al.), and U.S. Pat. No. 6,040,497 (Spencer, et al.) and aroA described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,094,945 (Comai) for glyphosate tolerance; a polynucleotide molecule encoding bromoxynil nitrilase (Bxn) described in U.S. Pat. No. 4,810,648 (Duerrschnabel, et al.) for Bromoxynil tolerance; a polynucleotide molecule encoding phytoene desaturase (crtI) described in Misawa et al, (1993) Plant J. 4:833-840 and Misawa et al, (1994) Plant J. 6:481-489 for norflurazon tolerance; a polynucleotide molecule encoding acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS, aka ALS) described in Sathasiivan et al. (1990) Nucl. Acids Res. 18:2188-2193 for tolerance to sulfonylurea herbicides; and the bar gene described in DeBlock, et al. (1987) EMBO J. 6:2513-2519 for glufosinate and bialaphos tolerance.

The regeneration, development, and cultivation of plants from various transformed explants are well documented in the art. This regeneration and growth process typically includes the steps of selecting transformed cells and culturing those individualized cells through the usual stages of embryonic development through the rooted plantlet stage. Transgenic embryos and seeds are similarly regenerated. The resulting transgenic rooted shoots are thereafter planted in an appropriate plant growth medium such as soil. Cells that survive the exposure to the selective agent, or cells that have been scored positive in a screening assay, may be cultured in media that supports regeneration of plants. Developing plantlets are transferred to soil less plant growth mix, and hardened off, prior to transfer to a greenhouse or growth chamber for maturation.

The present invention can be used with any transformable cell or tissue. By transformable as used herein is meant a cell or tissue that is capable of further propagation to give rise to a plant. Those of skill in the art recognize that a number of plant cells or tissues are transformable in which after insertion of exogenous DNA and appropriate culture conditions the plant cells or tissues can form into a differentiated plant. Tissue suitable for these purposes can include but is not limited to immature embryos, scutellar tissue, suspension cell cultures, immature inflorescence, shoot meristem, nodal explants, callus tissue, hypocotyl tissue, cotyledons, roots, and leaves.

Any suitable plant culture medium can be used Examples of suitable media would include but are not limited to MS-based media (Murashige and Skoog, Physiol. Plant, 15:473-497, 1962) or N6-based media (Chu et al., Scientia Sinica 18:659, 1975) supplemented with additional plant growth regulators including but not limited to auxins, cytokinins, ABA, and gibberellins. Those of skill in the art are familiar with the variety of tissue culture media, which when supplemented appropriately, support plant tissue growth and development and are suitable for plant transformation and regeneration. These tissue culture media can either be purchased as a commercial preparation, or custom prepared and modified. Those of skill in the art are aware that media and media supplements such as nutrients and growth regulators for use in transformation and regeneration and other culture conditions such as light intensity during incubation, pH, and incubation temperatures that can be optimized for the particular variety of interest.

One of ordinary skill will appreciate that, after an expression cassette is stably incorporated in transgenic plants and confirmed to be operable, it can be introduced into other plants by sexual crossing. Any of a number of standard breeding techniques can be used, depending upon the species to be crossed.

Identification of Plants with an Altered Oil Content Phenotype

We used an Arabidopsis activation tagging screen to identify the association between the genes we have identified and designated HIO# listed in column 1 of Table 1 below and altered oil content phenotypes (specifically, high oil phenotypes). Briefly, and as further described in the Examples, a large number of Arabidopsis plants were mutated with the pSKI015 vector, which comprises a T-DNA from the Ti plasmid of Agrobacterium tumifaciens, a viral enhancer element, and a selectable marker gene (Weigel et al., 2000). When the T-DNA inserts into the genome of transformed plants, the enhancer element can cause up-regulation genes in the vicinity, generally within about 9 kilobase (kb) of the enhancers. T1 plants were exposed to the selective agent in order to specifically recover transformed plants that expressed the selectable marker and therefore harbored T-DNA insertions. To amplify seed stocks, approximately 18 T2 plants were grown and exposed to the selective agent to recover plants expressing the selectable marker and therefore harboring the T-DNA element. T3 seed from these plants was harvested and pooled. Oil content of the seed was estimated using Near Infrared Spectroscopy (NIR) as described in the examples.

Arabidopsis lines that showed a high-oil phenotype were identified. The association of the HIO gene with the high oil phenotype was discovered by analysis of the genomic DNA sequence flanking the T-DNA insertion in the identified line. Accordingly, HIO genes and/or polypeptides may be employed in the development of genetically modified plants having a modified oil content phenotype (“a HIO phenotype”). HIO genes may be used in the generation of oilseed crops that provide improved oil yield from oilseed processing and in the generation of feed grain crops that provide increased energy for animal feeding. HIO genes may further be used to increase the oil content of specialty oil crops, in order to augment yield of desired unusual fatty acids. Transgenic plants that have been genetically modified to express HIO polypeptides can be used in the production of oil, wherein the transgenic plants are grown, and oil is obtained from plant parts (e.g. seed) using standard methods.

HIO Nucleic Acids and Polypeptides

The HIO genes we discovered in our activation tagging screen are listed in column 1 of Table 1. The Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR) identification numbers are provided in column 2. Column 3 provides Genbank identifier numbers (GI#s) (GI#18391126, GI#30683964, and GI#30693108) and corresponding sequence identifiers (SEQ ID NOs: 1, 3, and 5) for the nucleotide sequences, and column 4 provides GI#s (GI#15218452, GI#15226916, GI#15229046) and corresponding sequence identifiers (SEQ ID NOS: 2, 4, and 6) for the polypeptide sequences. Column 5 lists the putative biochemical function and/or protein name. Column 6 lists conserved protein domains. Column 7 lists the relative seed oil content of plants overexpressing the HIO gene. Column 8 provides GI#s for nucleic acid and/or polypeptide sequences of orthologous genes from other plant species.

As used herein, the term “HIO polypeptide” refers to a full-length HIO protein or a fragment, derivative (variant), or ortholog thereof that is “functionally active,” meaning that the protein fragment, derivative, or ortholog exhibits one or more or the functional activities associated with the full-length HIO polypeptide (SEQ ID NOS: 2, 4, 6). In one preferred embodiment, a functionally active HIO polypeptide causes an altered oil content phenotype when mis-expressed in a plant. In a further preferred embodiment, mis-expression of the HIO polypeptide causes a high oil phenotype in a plant. In another embodiment, a functionally active HIO polypeptide is capable of rescuing defective (including deficient) endogenous HIO activity when expressed in a plant or in plant cells; the rescuing polypeptide may be from the same or from a different species as that with defective activity. In another embodiment, a functionally active fragment of a full length HIO polypeptide (i.e. a native polypeptide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2, 4, 6 or a naturally occurring ortholog thereof) retains one of more of the biological properties associated with the full-length HIO polypeptide, such as signaling activity, binding activity, catalytic activity, or cellular or extra-cellular localizing activity. A HIO fragment preferably comprises a HIO domain, such as a C- or N-terminal or catalytic domain, among others, and preferably comprises at least 10, preferably at least 20, more preferably at least 25, and most preferably at least 50 contiguous amino acids of a HIO protein. Functional domains of HIO genes are listed in column 6 of Table 1 and can be identified using the PFAM program (Bateman A et al., 1999 Nucleic Acids Res 27:260-262).

Functionally active variants of full-length HIO polypeptides or fragments thereof include polypeptides with amino acid insertions, deletions, or substitutions that retain one of more of the biological properties associated with the full-length HIO polypeptide. In some cases, variants are generated that change the post-translational processing of a HIO polypeptide. For instance, variants may have altered protein transport or protein localization characteristics or altered protein half-life compared to the native polypeptide.

As used herein, the term “HIO nucleic acid” encompasses nucleic acids with the sequence provided in or complementary to the sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 3 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 1, 3, 5), as well as functionally active fragments, derivatives, or orthologs thereof. A HIO nucleic acid of this invention may be DNA, derived from genomic DNA or cDNA, or RNA.

In one embodiment, a functionally active HIO nucleic acid encodes or is complementary to a nucleic acid that encodes a functionally active HIO polypeptide. Included within this definition is genomic DNA that serves as a template for a primary RNA transcript (i.e., an mRNA precursor) that requires processing, such as splicing, before encoding the functionally active HIO polypeptide. A HIO nucleic acid can include other non-coding sequences, which may or may not be transcribed; such sequences include 5′ and 3′ UTRs, polyadenylation signals and regulatory sequences that control gene expression, among others, as are known in the art. Some polypeptides require processing events, such as proteolytic cleavage, covalent modification, etc., in order to become fully active. Accordingly, functionally active nucleic acids may encode the mature or the pre-processed HIO polypeptide, or an intermediate form. A HIO polynucleotide can also include heterologous coding sequences, for example, sequences that encode a marker included to facilitate the purification of the fused polypeptide, or a transformation marker.

In another embodiment, a functionally active HIO nucleic acid is capable of being used in the generation of loss-of-function HIO phenotypes, for instance, via antisense suppression, co-suppression, etc.

In one preferred embodiment, a HIO nucleic-acid used in the methods of this invention comprises a nucleic acid sequence that encodes or is complementary to a sequence that encodes a HIO polypeptide having at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 75%, 80%, 85%, 90%, 95% or more sequence identity to the polypeptide sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 4 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 2, 4, 6).

In another embodiment a HIO polypeptide of the invention comprises a polypeptide sequence with at least 50% or 60% identity to the HIO polypeptide sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 4 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 2, 4, 6), and may have at least 70%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% or more sequence identity to the HIO polypeptide sequence, and may include a conserved protein domain of the HIO polypeptide, such as the protein domain(s) listed in column 6 of Table 1. In another embodiment, a HIO polypeptide comprises a polypeptide sequence with at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% or more sequence identity to a functionally active fragment of the polypeptide of the GenBank entry referenced in column 4 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 2, 4, 6). In yet another embodiment, a HIO polypeptide comprises a polypeptide sequence with at least 50%, 60%, 70%, 80%, or 90% identity to the polypeptide sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 4 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 2, 4, 6) over its entire length and comprises a conserved protein domain(s) listed in column 6 of Table 1.

In another aspect, a HIO polynucleotide sequence is at least 50% to 60% identical, and may comprise at least 70%, 80%, 85%, 90% or 95% or more sequence identity over its entire length to the HIO nucleic acid sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 3 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 1, 3, 5) or nucleic acid sequences that are complementary to such a HIO sequence.

As used herein, “percent (%) sequence identity” with respect to a specified subject sequence, or a specified portion thereof, is defined as the percentage of nucleotides or amino acids in the candidate derivative sequence identical with the nucleotides or amino acids in the subject sequence (or specified portion thereof), after aligning the sequences and introducing gaps, if necessary to achieve the maximum percent sequence identity, as generated by the program WU-BLAST-2.0a19 (Altschul et al., J. Mol. Biol. (1997)215:403-410) with search parameters set to default values. The HSP S and HSP S2 parameters are dynamic values and are established by the program itself depending upon the composition of the particular sequence and composition of the particular database against which the sequence of interest is being searched. A “% identity value” is determined by the number of matching identical nucleotides or amino acids divided by the sequence length for which the percent identity is being reported. “Percent (%) amino acid sequence similarity” is determined by doing the same calculation as for determining % amino acid sequence identity, but including conservative amino acid substitutions in addition to identical amino acids in the computation. A conservative amino acid substitution is one in which an amino acid is substituted for another amino acid having similar properties such that the folding or activity of the protein is not significantly affected. Aromatic amino acids that can be substituted for each other are phenylalanine, tryptophan, and tyrosine; interchangeable hydrophobic amino acids are leucine, isoleucine, methionine, and valine; interchangeable polar amino acids are glutamine and asparagine; interchangeable basic amino acids are arginine, lysine and histidine; interchangeable acidic amino acids are aspartic acid and glutamic acid; and interchangeable small amino acids are alanine, serine, threonine, cysteine and glycine.

Derivative nucleic acid molecules of the subject nucleic acid molecules include sequences that selectively hybridize to the nucleic acid sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 3 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO: 1, 3, 5). The stringency of hybridization can be controlled by temperature, ionic strength, pH, and the presence of denaturing agents such as formamide during hybridization and washing. Conditions routinely used are well known (see, e.g., Current Protocol in Molecular Biology, Vol. 1, Chap. 2.10, John Wiley & Sons, Publishers (1994); Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning, Cold Spring Harbor (1989)). In some embodiments, a nucleic acid molecule of the invention is capable of hybridizing to a nucleic acid molecule containing the nucleotide sequence of the GenBank entry referenced in column 3 of Table 1 (SEQ ID NO:1, 3, 5) under stringent hybridization conditions that are: prehybridization of filters containing nucleic acid for 8 hours to overnight at 65° C. in a solution comprising 6× single strength citrate (SSC) (1×SSC is 0.15 M NaCl, 0.015 M Na citrate; pH 7.0), 5×Denhardt's solution, 0.05% sodium pyrophosphate and 100 μg/ml herring sperm DNA; hybridization for 18-20 hours at 65° C. in a solution containing 6×SSC, 1×Denhardt's solution, 100 μg/ml yeast tRNA and 0.05% sodium pyrophosphate; and washing of filters at 65° C. for 1 h in a solution containing 0.1×SSC and 0.1% SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate). In other embodiments, moderately stringent hybridization conditions are used that are: pretreatment of filters containing nucleic acid for 6 h at 40° C. in a solution containing 35% formamide, 5×SSC, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH-7.5), 5 mM EDTA, 0.1% PVP, 0.1% Ficoll, 1% BSA, and 500 μg/ml denatured salmon sperm DNA; hybridization for 18-20 h at 40° C. in a solution containing 35% formamide, 5×SSC, 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5), 5 mM EDTA, 0.02% PVP, 0.02% Ficoll, 0.2% BSA, 100 μg/ml salmon sperm DNA, and 10% (wt/vol) dextran sulfate; followed by washing twice for 1 hour at 55° C. in a solution containing 2×SSC and 0.1% SDS. Alternatively, low stringency conditions can be used that comprise: incubation for 8 hours to overnight at 37° C. in a solution comprising 20% formamide, 5×SSC, 50 mM sodium phosphate (pH 7.6), 5×Denhardt's solution, 10% dextran sulfate, and 20 μg/ml denatured sheared salmon sperm DNA; hybridization in the same buffer for 18 to 20 hours; and washing of filters in 1×SSC at about 37° C. for 1 hour.

As a result of the degeneracy of the genetic code, a number of polynucleotide sequences encoding a HIO polypeptide can be produced. For example, codons may be selected to increase the rate at which expression of the polypeptide occurs in a particular host species, in accordance with the optimum codon usage dictated by the particular host organism (see, e.g., Nakamura et al, 1999). Such sequence variants may be used in the methods of this invention.

The methods of the invention may use orthologs of the Arabidopsis. HIO. Putative orthologs of each of the Arabidopsis HIO genes identified in Table 1 below, are identified in column 8 of Table 1. Methods of identifying these and orthologs of HIO genes from other plant species are known in the art. Normally, orthologs in different species retain the same function, due to presence of one or more protein motifs and/or 3-dimensional structures. In evolution, when a gene duplication event follows speciation, a single gene in one species, such as Arabidopsis, may correspond to multiple genes (paralogs) in another. As used herein, the term “orthologs” encompasses paralogs. When sequence data is available for a particular plant species, orthologs are generally identified by sequence homology analysis, such as BLAST analysis, usually using protein bait sequences. Sequences are assigned as a potential ortholog if the best hit sequence from the forward BLAST result retrieves the original query sequence in the reverse BLAST (Huynen M A and Bork P, Proc Natl Acad Sci (1998) 95:5849-5856; Huynen M A et al., Genome Research (2000) 10:1204-1210).

Programs for multiple sequence alignment, such as CLUSTAL (Thompson J D et al, 1994, Nucleic Acids Res 22:4673-4680) may be used to highlight conserved regions and/or residues of orthologous proteins and to generate phylogenetic trees. In a phylogenetic tree representing multiple homologous sequences from diverse species (e.g., retrieved through BLAST analysis), orthologous sequences from two species generally appear closest on the tree with respect to all other sequences from these two species. Structural threading or other analysis of protein folding (e.g., using software by ProCeryon, Biosciences, Salzburg, Austria) may also identify potential orthologs. Nucleic acid hybridization methods may also be used to find orthologous genes and are preferred when sequence data are not available. Degenerate PCR and screening of cDNA or genomic DNA libraries are common methods for finding related gene sequences and are well known in the art (see, e.g., Sambrook, 1989; Dieffenbach and Dveksler, 1995). For instance, methods for generating a cDNA library from the plant species of interest and probing the library with partially homologous gene probes are described in Sambrook et al. A highly conserved portion of the Arabidopsis HIO coding sequence may be used as a probe. HIO ortholog nucleic acids may hybridize to the nucleic acid of the GenBank entry referenced in column 3 of Table 1 under high, moderate, or low stringency conditions. After amplification or isolation of a segment of a putative ortholog, that segment may be cloned and sequenced by standard techniques and utilized as a probe to isolate a complete cDNA or genomic clone. Alternatively, it is possible to initiate an EST project to generate a database of sequence information for the plant species of interest. In another approach, antibodies that specifically bind known HIO polypeptides are used for ortholog isolation (see, e.g., Harlow and Lane, 1988, 1999). Western blot analysis can determine that a HIO ortholog (i.e., an orthologous protein) is present in a crude extract of a particular plant species. When reactivity is observed, the sequence encoding the candidate ortholog may be isolated by screening expression libraries representing the particular plant species. Expression libraries can be constructed in a variety of commercially available vectors, including lambda gt11, as described in Sambrook, et al., 1989. Once the candidate ortholog(s) are identified by any of these means, candidate orthologous sequence are used as bait (the “query”) for the reverse BLAST against sequences from Arabidopsis or other species in which HIO nucleic acid and/or polypeptide sequences have been identified.

HIO nucleic acids and polypeptides may be obtained using any available method. For instance, techniques for isolating cDNA or genomic DNA sequences of interest by screening DNA libraries or by using polymerase chain reaction (PCR), as previously described, are well known in the art. Alternatively, nucleic acid sequence may be synthesized. Any known method, such as site directed mutagenesis (Kunkel T A et al., 1991), may be used to introduce desired changes into a cloned nucleic acid.

In general, the methods of the invention involve incorporating the desired form of the HIO nucleic acid into a plant expression vector for transformation of in plant cells, and the HIO polypeptide is expressed in the host plant.

An isolated HIO nucleic acid molecule is other than in the form or setting in which it is found in nature and is identified and separated from least one contaminant nucleic acid molecule with which it is ordinarily associated in the natural source of the HIO nucleic acid. However, an isolated HIO nucleic acid molecule includes HIO nucleic acid molecules contained in cells that ordinarily express HIO where, for example, the nucleic acid molecule is in a chromosomal location different from that of natural cells.

TABLE 1 5. Putative bio- 8. chemical 6. 7. Orthologous Genes: Nucleic 3. 4. function/ Conserved Relative Seed Acid/Polypeptide seq. GI# 1. 2. Nucleic Acid Polypeptide protein protein Oil content Nucleic Acid Polypeptide HIO # Tair seq. GI# seq. GI# name domain (%) GI# GI# Species HIO At1g10220 gi|18391126 gi|15218452 hypothetical none 108% gi|30696314 gi|18406390 Arabidopsis 108 SEQ ID NO: 1 SEQ ID NO: 2 protein thaliana HIO At2g28630 gi|30683964 gi|15226916 beta- PF02797 107% gi|37535299 gi|37535300 Oryza 133 SEQ ID NO: 3 SEQ ID NO: 4 ketoacyl- Chatcone and sativa CoA stilbene gi|37991938 gi|40882703 Oryza synthase synthases, C- sativa terminal gi|21403426| gi|21536949 Arabidopsis domain thaliana gi: 30680312 gi|15222994 Arabidopsis thaliana HIO At3g48910 GI#30693108 GI#15229046 expressed SM00298: 115% and gi|16923282 gi|16923283 Oryza 134-E SEQ ID NO: 5 SEQ ID NO: 6 protein Chromatin 105% of wild sativa organization type controls (japonica modifier in 2 separate cultivar- domain re-capitulation group) PF05032: experiments Spo12 family

Generation of Genetically Modified Plants with an Altered Oil Content Phenotype

HIO nucleic acids and polypeptides may be used in the generation of genetically modified plants having a modified oil content phenotype. As used herein, a “modified oil content phenotype” may refer to modified oil content in any part of the plant; the modified oil content is often observed in seeds. In a preferred embodiment, altered expression of the HIO gene in a plant is used to generate plants with a high oil phenotype.

The methods described herein are generally applicable to all plants. Although activation tagging and gene identification is carried out in Arabidopsis, the HIO gene (or an ortholog, variant or fragment thereof) may be expressed in any type of plant. In a preferred embodiment, the invention is directed to oil-producing plants, which produce and store triacylglycerol in specific organs, primarily in seeds. Such species include soybean (Glycine max), rapeseed and canola (including Brassica napus, B. campestris), sunflower (Helianthus annus), cotton (Gossypium hirsutum), corn (Zea mays), cocoa (Theobroma cacao), safflower (Carthamus tinctorius), oil palm (Elaeis guineensis), coconut palm (Cocos nucifera), flax (Linum usitatissimum), castor (Ricinus communis) and peanut (Arachis hypogaea). The invention may also be directed to fruit- and vegetable-bearing plants, grain-producing plants, nut-producing plants, rapid cycling Brassica species, alfalfa (Medicago sativa), tobacco (Nicotiana), turfgrass (Poaceae family), other forage crops, and wild species that may be a source of unique fatty acids.

The skilled artisan will recognize that a wide variety of transformation techniques exist in the art, and new techniques are continually becoming available. Any technique that is suitable for the target host plant can be employed within the scope of the present invention. For example, the constructs can be introduced in a variety of forms including, but not limited to as a strand of DNA, in a plasmid, or in an artificial chromosome. The introduction of the constructs into the target plant cells can be accomplished by a variety of techniques, including, but not limited to Agrobacterium-mediated transformation, electroporation, microinjection, microprojectile bombardment calcium-phosphate-DNA co-precipitation or liposome-mediated transformation of a heterologous nucleic acid. The transformation of the plant is preferably permanent, i.e. by integration of the introduced expression constructs into the host plant genome, so that the introduced constructs are passed onto successive plant generations. Depending upon the intended use, a heterologous nucleic acid construct comprising an HIO polynucleotide may encode the entire protein or a biologically active portion thereof.

In one embodiment, binary Ti-based vector systems may be used to transfer polynucleotides. Standard Agrobacterium binary vectors are known to those of kill in the art, and many are commercially available (e.g., pBI121 Clontech Laboratories, Palo Alto, Calif.). A construct or vector may include a plant promoter to express the nucleic acid molecule of choice. In a preferred embodiment, the promoter is a plant promoter.

The optimal procedure for transformation of plants with Agrobacterium vectors will vary with the type of plant being transformed. Exemplary methods for Agrobacterium-mediated transformation include transformation of explants of hypocotyl, shoot tip, stem or leaf tissue, derived from sterile seedlings and/or plantlets. Such transformed plants may be reproduced sexually, or by cell or tissue culture. Agrobacterium transformation has been previously described for a large number of different types of plants and methods for such transformation may be found in the scientific literature. Of particular relevance are methods to transform commercially important crops, such as rapeseed (De Block et al., 1989), sunflower (Everett et al., 1987), and soybean (Christou et al., 1989; Kline et al., 1987).

Expression (including transcription and translation) of HIO may be regulated with respect to the level of expression, the tissue type(s) where expression takes place and/or developmental stage of expression. A number of heterologous regulatory sequences (e.g., promoters and enhancers) are available for controlling the expression of a HIO nucleic acid. These include constitutive, inducible and regulatable promoters, as well as promoters and enhancers that control expression in a tissue- or temporal-specific manner. Exemplary constitutive promoters include the raspberry E4 promoter (U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,783,393 and 5,783,394), the nopaline synthase (NOS) promoter (Ebert et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (U.S.A.) 84:5745-5749, 1987), the octopine synthase (OCS) promoter (which is carried on tumor-inducing plasmids of Agrobacterium tumefaciens), the caulirovirus promoters such as the cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) 19S promoter (Lawton et al., Plant Mol. Biol. 9:315-324, 1987) and the CaMV 35S promoter (Odell et al., Nature 313:810-812, 1985 and Jones J D et al, 1992), the melon actin promoter (published PCT application WO0056863), the figwort mosaic virus 35S-promoter (U.S. Pat. No. 5,378,619), the light-inducible promoter from the small subunit of ribulose-1,5-bis-phosphate carboxylase (ssRUBISCO), the Adh promoter (Walker et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (U.S.A.) 84:6624-6628, 1987), the sucrose synthase promoter (Yang et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. (U.S.A.) 87:4144-4148, 1990), the R gene complex promoter (Chandler et al., The Plant Cell 1:1175-1183, 1989), the chlorophyll a/b binding protein gene promoter the CsVMV promoter (Verdaguer B et al., 1998); these promoters have been used to create DNA constructs that have been expressed in plants, e.g., PCT publication WO 84/02913. Exemplary tissue-specific promoters include the tomato E4 and E8 promoters (U.S. Pat. No. 5,859,330) and the tomato 2AII gene promoter (Van Haaren M J J et al., 1993).

In one preferred embodiment, HIO expression is under control of regulatory sequences from genes whose expression is associated with early seed and/or embryo development. Indeed, in a preferred embodiment, the promoter used is a seed-enhanced promoter. Examples of such promoters include the 5′ regulatory regions from such genes as napin (Kridl et al., Seed Sci. Res. 1:209:219, 1991), globulin (Belanger and Kriz, Genet., 129: 863-872, 1991, GenBank Accession No. L22295), gamma zein Z 27 (Lopes et al., Mol Gen Genet., 247:603-613, 1995), L3 oleosin promoter (U.S. Pat. No. 6,433,252), phaseolin (Bustos et al., Plant Cell, 1(9):839-853, 1989), arcelin5 (US 2003/0046727), a soybean 7S promoter, a 7Sα promoter (US 2003/0093828), the soybean 7Sα′ beta conglycinin promoter, a 7S α′ promoter (Beachy et al., EMBO J., 4:3047, 1985; Schuler et al., Nucleic Acid Res., 10(24):8225-8244, 1982), soybean trypsin inhibitor (Riggs et al., Plant Cell 1(6):609-621, 1989), ACP (Baerson et al., Plant Mol. Biol., 22(2):255-267, 1993), stearoyl-ACP desaturase (Slocombe et al., Plant Physiol. 104(4):167-176, 1994), soybean a′ subunit of β-conglycinin (Chen et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 83:8560-8564, 1986), Vicia faba USP (P-Vf.Usp, SEQ ID NO: 1, 2, and 3 in (US 2003/229918) and Zea mays L3 oleosin promoter (Hong et al., Plant Mol. Biol., 34(3):549-555, 1997). Also included are the zeins, which are a group of storage proteins found in corn endosperm. Genomic clones for zein genes have been isolated (Pedersen et al, Cell 29:1015-1026, 1982; and Russell et al., Transgenic Res. 6(2):157-168) and the promoters from these clones, including the 15 kD, 16 kD, 19 kD, 22 kD, 27 kD and genes, could also be used. Other promoters known to function, for example, in corn include the promoters for the following genes: waxy, Brittle, Shrunken 2, Branching enzymes I and II, starch synthases, debranching enzymes, oleosins, glutelins and sucrose synthases. Legume genes whose promoters are associated with early seed and embryo development include V. faba legumin (Baumlein et al., 1991, Mol Gen Genet. 225:121-8; Baumlein et al., 1992, Plant J 2:233-9), V. faba usp (Fiedler et al., 1993, Plant Mol Biol 22:669-79), pea convicilin (Bown et al., 1988, Biochem J 251:717-26), pea lectin (dePater et al., 1993, Plant Cell 5:877-86), P. vulgaris beta phaseolin (Bustos et al., 1991, EMBO J. 10:1469-79), P. vulgaris DLEC2 and PHS [beta] (Bobb et al, 1997, Nucleic Acids Res 25:641-7), and soybean beta-Conglycinin, 7S storage protein (Chamberland et al., 1992, Plant Mol Biol 19:937-49).

Cereal genes whose promoters are associated with early seed and embryo development include rice glutelin (“GluA-3,” Yoshihara and Takaiwa, 1996, Plant Cell Physiol 37:107-11; “GluB-1,” Takaiwa et al., 1996, Plant Mol Biol 30:1207-21; Washida et al., 1999, Plant Mol Biol 40:1-12; “Gt3,” Leisy et al., 1990, Plant Mol Biol 14:41-50), rice prolamin (Zhou & Fan, 1993, Transgenic Res 2:141-6), wheat prolamin (Hammond-Kosack et al., 1993, EMBO J. 12:545-54), maize zein (Z4, Matzke et al., 1990, Plant Mol Biol 14:323-32), and barley B-hordeins (Entwistle et al., 1991, Plant Mol Biol 17:1217-31).

Other genes whose promoters are associated with early seed and embryo development include oil palm GLO7A (7S globulin, Morcillo et al., 2001, Physiol Plant 112:233-243), Brassica napus napin, 2S storage protein, and napA gene (Josefsson et al., 1987, J Biol Chem 262: 12196-201; Stalberg et al., 1993, Plant Mol Biol 1993 23:671-83; Ellerstrom et al., 1996, Plant Mol Biol 32:1019-27), Brassica napus oleosin (Keddie et al., 1994, Plant Mol Biol 24:327-40), Arabidopsis oleosin (Plant et al., 1994, Plant Mol Biol 25:193-205), Arabidopsis FAE1 (Rossak et al., 2001, Plant Mol Biol 46:717-25), Canavalia gladiata conA (Yamamoto et al., 1995, Plant Mol Biol 27: 729-41), and Catharanthus roseus strictosidine synthase (Str, Ouwerkerk and Memelink, 1999, Mol Gen Genet. 261:635-43). In another preferred embodiment, regulatory sequences from genes expressed during oil biosynthesis are used (see, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,952,544). Alternative promoters are from plant storage protein genes (Bevan et al, 1993, Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 342:209-15). Additional promoters that may be utilized are described, for example, in U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,378,619; 5,391,725; 5,428,147; 5,447,858; 5,608,144; 5,608,144; 5,614,399; 5,633,441; 5,633,435; and 4,633,436.

In yet another aspect, in some cases it may be desirable to inhibit the expression of endogenous HIO in a host cell. Exemplary methods for practicing this aspect of the invention include, but are not limited to antisense suppression (Smith, et al., 1988; van der Krol et al., 1988); co-suppression (Napoli, et al., 1990); ribozymes (PCT Publication WO 97/10328); and combinations of sense and antisense (Waterhouse, et al., 1998). Methods for the suppression of endogenous sequences in a host cell typically employ the transcription or transcription and translation of at least a portion of the sequence to be suppressed. Such sequences may be homologous to coding as well as non-coding regions of the endogenous sequence. Antisense inhibition may use the entire cDNA sequence (Sheehy et al., 1988), a partial cDNA sequence including fragments of 5′ coding sequence, (Cannon et al., 1990), or 3′ non-coding sequences (Ch'ng et al., 1989). Cosuppression techniques may use the entire cDNA sequence (Napoli et al., 1990; van der Krol et al., 1990), or a partial cDNA sequence (Smith et al., 1990).

Standard molecular and genetic tests may be performed to further analyze the association between a gene and an observed phenotype. Exemplary techniques are described below.

1. DNA/RNA Analysis

The stage- and tissue-specific gene expression patterns in mutant versus wild-type lines may be determined, for instance, by in situ hybridization. Analysis of the methylation status of the gene, especially flanking regulatory regions, may be performed. Other suitable techniques include overexpression, ectopic expression, expression in other plant species and gene knock-out (reverse genetics, targeted knockout, viral induced gene silencing [VIGS, see Baulcombe D, 1999]).

In a preferred application expression profiling, generally by microarray analysis, is used to simultaneously measure differences or induced changes in the expression of many different genes. Techniques for microarray analysis are well known in the art (Schena M et al., Science (1995) 270:467-470; Baldwin D et al., 1999; Dangond F, Physiol Genomics (2000) 2:53-58; van Hal N L et al., J Biotechnol (2000) 78:271-280; Richmond T and Somerville S, Curr Opin Plant Biol (2000) 3:108-116). Expression profiling of individual tagged lines may be performed. Such analysis can identify other genes that are coordinately regulated as a consequence of the overexpression of the gene of interest, which may help to place an unknown gene in a particular pathway.

2. Gene Product Analysis

Analysis of gene products may include recombinant protein expression, antisera production, immunolocalization, biochemical assays for catalytic or other activity, analysis of phosphorylation status, and analysis of interaction with other proteins via yeast two-hybrid assays.

3. Pathway Analysis

Pathway analysis may include placing a gene or gene product within a particular biochemical, metabolic or signaling pathway based on its mis-expression phenotype or by sequence homology with related genes. Alternatively, analysis may comprise genetic crosses with wild-type lines and other mutant lines (creating double mutants) to order the gene in a pathway, or determining the effect of a mutation on expression of downstream “reporter” genes in a pathway.

Generation of Mutated Plants with an Altered Oil Content Phenotype

The invention further provides a method of identifying plants that have mutations in endogenous HIO that confer altered oil content, and generating altered oil content progeny of these plants that are not genetically modified. In one method, called “TILLING” (for targeting induced local lesions in genomes), mutations are induced in the seed of a plant of interest, for example, using EMS treatment. The resulting plants are grown and self-fertilized, and the progeny are used to prepare DNA samples. HIO-specific PCR is used to identify whether a mutated plant has a HIO mutation. Plants having HIO mutations may then be tested for altered oil content, or alternatively, plants may be tested for altered oil content, and then HIO-specific PCR is used to determine whether a plant having altered oil content has a mutated HIO gene. TILLING can identify mutations that may alter the expression of specific genes or the activity of proteins encoded by these genes (see Colbert et al (2001) Plant Physiol 126:480-484; McCallum et al (2000) Nature Biotechnology 18:455-457).

In another method, a candidate gene/Quantitative Trait Locus (QTLs) approach can be used in a marker-assisted breeding program to identify alleles of or mutations in the HIO gene or orthologs of HIO that may confer altered oil content (see Bert et al., Theor Appl Genet. 2003 June; 107(1):181-9; and Lionneton et al, Genome. 2002 December; 45(6):1203-15). Thus, in a further aspect of the invention, a HIO nucleic acid is used to identify whether a plant having altered oil content has a mutation in endogenous HIO or has a particular allele that causes altered oil content.

While the invention has been described with reference to specific methods and embodiments, it will be appreciated that various modifications and changes may be made without departing from the invention. All publications cited herein are expressly incorporated herein by reference for the purpose of describing and disclosing compositions and methodologies that might be used in connection with the invention. All cited patents, patent applications, and sequence information in referenced websites and public databases are also incorporated by reference.

EXAMPLES Example 1 Generation of Plants with a HIO Phenotype by Transformation with an Activation Tagging Construct

Mutants were generated using the activation tagging “ACTTAG” vector, pSKI015 (GI#6537289; Weigel D et al., 2000). Standard methods were used for the generation of Arabidopsis transgenic plants, and were essentially as described in published application PCT WO0183697. Briefly, TO Arabidopsis (Col-0) plants were transformed with Agrobacterium carrying the pSKI015 vector, which comprises T-DNA derived from the Agrobacterium Ti plasmid, an herbicide resistance selectable marker gene, and the 4×CaMV 35S enhancer element. Transgenic plants were selected at the Ti generation based on herbicide resistance.

T3 seed was analyzed by Near Inared Spectroscopy (NIR) at the time of harvest. NIR infrared spectra were captured using a Bruker 22 N/F. Bruker Software was used to estimate total seed oil and total seed protein content using data from NIR analysis and reference methods according to the manufacturers instructions. Oil contents predicted by our calibration (ren oil 1473 1d+sline.q2, Predicts Hexane Extracted Oil), which followed the general method of AOCS Procedure AM1-92, Official Methods and Recommended Practices of the American Oil Chemists Society, 5th Ed., AOCS, Champaign, Ill., were compared for 38,090 individual ACTTAG lines. Subsequent to seed compositional analysis, the position of the ACTTAG element in the genome in each line was determined by inverse PCR and sequencing. 38,090 lines with recovered flanking sequences were considered in this analysis.

Since the 38,090 lines were planted and grown over a 12-month period, the seed oil content values were normalized to minimize the effect of environmental differences which may alter seed oil content. The average seed oil content and its standard deviation, for each day lines were planted, were calculated. The seed oil content was expressed as a “relative standard deviation distance” (SD distance) which was calculated by subtracting the average seed oil content for the planting day from seed oil content for each line and dividing the difference by the standard deviation for that day. This normalization allows comparison of seed oil content in seed from plants grown throughout the year.

Genes that cause a high seed oil phenotype when over-expressed were identified by evaluating all of the genes affected by ACTTAG elements in the 38,090 lines. This was accomplished by the following procedure; first, the genes likely to be activated by the ACTTAG element in each line were identified and the seed oil content of the line was assigned to these genes; second, the seed oil content when a particular gene is over-expressed was determined by averaging the individual seed oil values for each gene. Since 38,090 lines were evaluated and each element affects an average of 2.5 genes, each gene will have an average of 4 seed oil values. The genes with the highest average SD distance were determined to be those that cause a high seed oil phenotype when over-expressed.

Example 2 Characterization of the T-DNA Insertion in Plants Exhibiting the Altered Oil Content Phenotype

We performed standard molecular analyses, essentially as described in patent application PCT WO0183697, to determine the site of the T-DNA insertion associated with the altered oil content phenotype. Briefly, genomic DNA was extracted from plants exhibiting the altered oil content phenotype. PCR, using primers specific to the pSKI015 vector, confirmed the presence of the 35S enhancer in plants from the HIO oil line, and Southern blot analysis verified the genomic integration of the ACTTAG T-DNA and showed the presence of the T-DNA insertions in each of the transgenic lines.

Inverse PCR was used to recover genomic DNA flanking the T-DNA insertion, which was then subjected to sequence analysis using a basic BLASTN search and/or a search of the Arabidopsis Information Resource (TAIR) database.

Example 3 Recapitulation of HIO Phenotype

To test whether over-expression of At1g10220 causes a high seed oil phenotype, oil content in seeds from transgenic plants over-expressing this gene was compared with oil content in seeds from non-transgenic control plants. To do this, At1g10220 was cloned into a plant transformation vector behind the seed specific CsVMV promoter and transformed into Arabidopsis plants using the floral dip method. The plant transformation vector contains the nptII gene driven by the RE4 promoter, to provide resistance to kanamyacin, and serve as a selectable marker. Seed from the transformed plants were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin. After 7 days, transgenic plants were identified as healthy green plants and transplanted to soil. Non-transgenic control plants were germinated on agar medium, allowed to grow for 7 days and then transplanted to soil. Twenty-two transgenic seedlings and 10 non-transgenic control plants were transplanted to random positions in the same 32 cell flat. The plants were grown to maturity allowed to self-fertilize and set seed. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from each plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 2. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

The effect of over-expression of At1g10220 on seed oil has been tested in three experiments. In all 3 experiments, the plants over-expressing At1g10220 had higher seed oil content than the control plants grown in the same flat Across the experiments, the average seed oil content of plants over-expressing At1g10220 was 3.4% greater than the untransformed controls. The seed oil content in plants over-expressing At1g10220 was significantly greater than non-transgenic control plants (two-way ANOVA; P 0.0=43).

TABLE 2 Pre- Relative dicted value Experiment Plant ID Transgene average average 1 DX06876001 None 28.42 99.45 1 DX06876002 None 29.53 103.34 1 DX06876003 None 27.00 94.46 1 DX06876004 None 26.26 91.90 1 DX06876005 None 31.26 109.39 1 DX06876006 None 28.34 99.15 1 DX06876007 None 27.27 95.41 1 DX06876008 None 28.64 100.19 1 DX06876009 None 31.77 111.17 1 DX06876010 None 27.31 95.54 1 DX06894001 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.02 98.04 1 DX06894002 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.06 101.67 1 DX06894003 CsVMV::At1g10220 27.65 96.74 1 DX06894005 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.28 112.95 1 DX06894006 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.08 115.76 1 DX06894007 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.21 102.22 1 DX06894008 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.28 98.94 1 DX06894009 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.03 101.57 1 DX06894010 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.09 105.30 1 DX06894011 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.38 109.80 1 DX06894012 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.13 101.93 1 DX06894013 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.01 105.01 1 DX06894014 CsVMV::At1g10220 27.83 97.39 1 DX06894015 CsVMV::At1g10220 25.99 90.96 1 DX06894016 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.59 100.04 1 DX06894017 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.37 109.77 1 DX06894018 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.94 101.25 1 DX06894019 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.01 104.99 1 DX06894020 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.61 100.10 1 DX06894021 CsVMV::At1g10220 27.88 97.56 1 DX06894022 CsVMV::At1g10220 27.24 95.33 2 DX06877001 None 29.11 97.56 2 DX06877002 None 27.83 93.27 2 DX06877003 None 31.39 105.20 2 DX06877004 None 28.63 95.95 2 DX06877005 None 32.60 109.28 2 DX06877006 None 31.39 105.20 2 DX06877007 None 29.09 97.51 2 DX06877008 None 28.75 96.36 2 DX06877009 None 29.84 100.02 2 DX06877010 None 29.73 99.64 2 DX06895001 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.66 109.46 2 DX06895002 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.29 101.52 2 DX06895003 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.12 100.95 2 DX06895004 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.43 105.34 2 DX06895005 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.31 111.64 2 DX06895006 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.71 109.64 2 DX06895007 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.89 106.90 2 DX06895008 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.91 100.25 2 DX06895009 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.17 111.19 2 DX06895010 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.25 111.44 2 DX06895011 CsVMV::At1g10220 34.24 114.76 2 DX06895012 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.91 106.94 2 DX06895013 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.52 102.28 2 DX06895014 CsVMV::At1g10220 28.95 97.05 2 DX06895015 CsVMV::At1g10220 27.55 92.33 2 DX06895016 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.14 107.74 2 DX06895017 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.99 100.54 2 DX06895018 CsVMV::At1g10220 29.33 98.32 2 DX06895019 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.57 102.46 2 DX06895020 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.04 100.67 2 DX06895021 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.18 104.50 2 DX06895022 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.35 101.73 3 G002758001 None 32.09 99.77 3 G002758002 None 31.97 99.39 3 G002758003 None 32.09 99.78 3 G002758004 None 31.66 98.44 3 G002758005 None 32.60 101.35 3 G002758007 None 32.41 100.77 3 G002758008 None 31.81 98.90 3 G002758010 None 32.67 101.59 3 G002749001 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.80 105.08 3 G002749002 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.87 99.10 3 G002749003 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.93 102.37 3 G002749004 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.20 100.11 3 G002749005 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.37 103.76 3 G002749006 CsVMV::At1g10220 35.77 111.22 3 G002749007 CsVMV::At1g10220 34.00 105.70 3 G002749008 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.10 99.79 3 G002749009 CsVMV::At1g10220 35.77 111.23 3 G002749010 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.94 102.43 3 G002749011 CsVMV::At1g10220 36.04 112.04 3 G002749012 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.77 101.90 3 G002749013 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.74 104.91 3 G002749014 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.87 105.29 3 G002749015 CsVMV::At1g10220 35.25 109.60 3 G002749016 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.29 103.51 3 G002749017 CsVMV::At1g10220 30.82 95.83 3 G002749018 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.01 102.63 3 G002749019 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.82 98.92 3 G002749020 CsVMV::At1g10220 32.12 99.88 3 G002749021 CsVMV::At1g10220 31.43 97.73 3 G002749022 CsVMV::At1g10220 33.31 103.57

Example 4

To determine if the high oil phenotype is passed to the next generation, seed from T2 seed from 7 plants grown in Experiment 3 were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin and allowed to germinate and grow for 7 days. These eight plants represent 8 different transformation events. Twenty-two kanamycin-resistant seedlings were transplanted to random positions within a 32 cell tray as described above. Ten non-transgenic control (Col-0) plants were also transplanted into the tray. The plants were grown to maturity, allowed to self-fertilize and set seed. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from each plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 3. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

Transgenic plants from 5 of the 7 transformation events tested had significantly more oil than the control plants grown in the same flat as determined by a T-test (p>0.05).

TABLE 3 Relative Exper- Predicted Value T-test P iment Plant Parent Average Average value 1 DX07702001 G002749011 33.02 99.87 4.8E−05 1 DX07702002 G002749011 35.94 108.69 1 DX07702003 G002749011 37.66 113.91 1 DX07702004 G002749011 36.76 111.17 1 DX07702005 G002749011 36.24 109.6 1 DX07702006 G002749011 34.37 103.94 1 DX07702007 G002749011 36.71 111.03 1 DX07702009 G002749011 34.91 105.58 1 DX07702010 G002749011 35.68 107.89 1 DX07702011 G002749011 35.89 108.56 1 DX07702012 G002749011 35.47 107.27 1 DX07702013 G002749011 35.13 106.25 1 DX07702014 G002749011 35.24 106.57 1 DX07702015 G002749011 35.15 106.32 1 DX07702016 G002749011 35.26 106.63 1 DX07702017 G002749011 33.57 101.53 1 DX07702018 G002749011 36.65 110.84 1 DX07702019 G002749011 35.43 107.15 1 DX07702020 G002749011 33.52 101.37 1 DX07702021 G002749011 36.79 111.27 1 DX07702022 G002749011 37.34 112.93 1 DX07716001 COL-0 33.26 100.59 1 DX07716002 COL-0 31.27 94.58 1 DX07716003 COL-0 31.12 94.13 1 DX07716004 COL-0 33.64 101.75 1 DX07716005 COL-0 33.5 101.33 1 DX07716006 COL-0 34.48 104.28 1 DX07716007 COL-0 32.22 97.43 1 DX07716008 COL-0 34.42 104.09 1 DX07716009 COL-0 34.1 103.13 1 DX07716010 COL-0 32.64 98.71 2 DX07703001 G002749009 33.98 109.86 0.0017 2 DX07703002 G002749009 36.14 116.81 2 DX07703003 G002749009 31.87 103.02 2 DX07703004 G002749009 35.64 115.21 2 DX07703005 G002749009 35.58 115.01 2 DX07703006 G002749009 33.72 109.01 2 DX07703007 G002749009 32.91 106.4 2 DX07703008 G002749009 34.28 110.81 2 DX07703009 G002749009 33.46 108.17 2 DX07703010 G002749009 32.69 105.67 2 DX07703011 G002749009 29.04 93.86 2 DX07703012 G002749009 35.59 115.04 2 DX07703013 G002749009 33.2 107.33 2 DX07703014 G002749009 31.99 103.4 2 DX07703015 G002749009 33.17 107.22 2 DX07703016 G002749009 33.88 109.52 2 DX07703017 G002749009 34.12 110.3 2 DX07703018 G002749009 32.75 105.87 2 DX07703019 G002749009 34.97 113.03 2 DX07703020 G002749009 30.19 97.6 2 DX07703021 G002749009 35.22 113.86 2 DX07703022 G002749009 31.07 100.45 2 DX07717001 COL-0 32.2 104.08 2 DX07717002 COL-0 33.83 109.34 2 DX07717003 COL-0 32.44 104.87 2 DX07717004 COL-0 29.35 94.87 2 DX07717005 COL-0 30.67 99.15 2 DX07717006 COL-0 29.21 94.42 2 DX07717007 COL-0 30.94 100.02 2 DX07717008 COL-0 29.14 94.2 2 DX07717009 COL-0 30.64 99.05 3 DX07706001 G002749007 32.51 106.61 0.0156 3 DX07706002 G002749007 31.13 102.06 3 DX07706003 G002749007 34.87 114.33 3 DX07706004 G002749007 30.63 100.44 3 DX07706005 G002749007 33.4 109.51 3 DX07706006 G002749007 31.07 101.86 3 DX07706007 G002749007 29.99 98.32 3 DX07706008 G002749007 30.06 98.57 3 DX07706009 G002749007 35.68 116.98 3 DX07706010 G002749007 32.95 108.04 3 DX07706011 G002749007 34.21 112.16 3 DX07706012 G002749007 33.95 111.33 3 DX07706013 G002749007 31.96 104.81 3 DX07706014 G002749007 31.23 102.39 3 DX07706015 G002749007 30.03 98.47 3 DX07706016 G002749007 31.75 104.1 3 DX07706018 G002749007 30.8 101.01 3 DX07706019 G002749007 31.34 102.75 3 DX07706020 G002749007 31.44 103.07 3 DX07706021 G002749007 32.55 106.72 3 DX07706022 G002749007 34.34 112.61 3 DX07720001 COL-0 31.75 104.1 3 DX07720002 COL-0 29.67 97.29 3 DX07720003 COL-0 31 101.65 3 DX07720004 COL-0 32.1 105.26 3 DX07720005 COL-0 32.08 105.2 3 DX07720006 COL-0 31.23 102.41 3 DX07720007 COL-0 30.53 100.12 3 DX07720008 COL-0 27.09 88.81 3 DX07720009 COL-0 28.51 93.49 3 DX07720010 COL-0 31.01 101.67 4 DX07707001 G002749014 33.52 113.42 0.0067 4 DX07707002 G002749014 34.49 116.7 4 DX07707003 G002749014 34.25 115.88 4 DX07707004 G002749014 35.94 121.61 4 DX07707005 G002749014 29.51 99.85 4 DX07707006 G002749014 28.3 95.73 4 DX07707007 G002749014 35.69 120.74 4 DX07707008 G002749014 30.63 103.62 4 DX07707009 G002749014 35.53 120.22 4 DX07707010 G002749014 32.76 110.84 4 DX07707011 G002749014 35.38 119.71 4 DX07707012 G002749014 30.68 103.81 4 DX07707013 G002749014 31.36 106.11 4 DX07707014 G002749014 31.43 106.35 4 DX07707015 G002749014 35.11 118.79 4 DX07707016 G002749014 33.02 111.7 4 DX07707017 G002749014 32.11 108.64 4 DX07707018 G002749014 29.25 98.97 4 DX07707019 G002749014 32 108.25 4 DX07707020 G002749014 30.8 104.21 4 DX07707021 G002749014 35.33 119.54 4 DX07707022 G002749014 32.01 108.29 4 DX07721001 COL-0 33.18 112.26 4 DX07721002 COL-0 26.24 88.78 4 DX07721003 COL-0 34.38 116.31 4 DX07721004 COL-0 27 91.36 4 DX07721005 COL-0 28.82 97.51 4 DX07721006 COL-0 28.15 95.25 4 DX07721007 COL-0 27.3 92.37 4 DX07721008 COL-0 29.29 99.11 4 DX07721009 COL-0 29.19 98.75 4 DX07721010 COL-0 32.01 108.31 5 DX07708001 G002749001 31.16 105.11 0.0023 5 DX07708002 G002749001 34.12 115.12 5 DX07708003 G002749001 33.61 113.38 5 DX07708004 G002749001 34.5 116.4 5 DX07708005 G002749001 28.52 96.21 5 DX07708006 G002749001 34.7 117.07 5 DX07708007 G002749001 29.88 100.8 5 DX07708008 G002749001 33.76 113.88 5 DX07708009 G002749001 32.11 108.34 5 DX07708010 G002749001 31.45 106.09 5 DX07708011 G002749001 29.06 98.05 5 DX07708012 G002749001 32.46 109.53 5 DX07708013 G002749001 31.88 107.57 5 DX07708014 G002749001 33.52 113.09 5 DX07708015 G002749001 33.19 111.96 5 DX07708016 G002749001 30.56 103.09 5 DX07708017 G002749001 27.04 91.23 5 DX07708018 G002749001 33.67 113.6 5 DX07708019 G002749001 32.7 110.31 5 DX07708020 G002749001 30.88 104.17 5 DX07708021 G002749001 33.23 112.12 5 DX07722001 COL-0 30.59 103.19 5 DX07722002 COL-0 29.09 98.13 5 DX07722003 COL-0 27.94 94.27 5 DX07722004 COL-0 28.26 95.33 5 DX07722005 COL-0 29.08 98.12 5 DX07722006 COL-0 30.42 102.61 5 DX07722007 COL-0 31.36 105.79 5 DX07722008 COL-0 32.84 110.78 5 DX07722009 COL-0 29 97.84 5 DX07722010 COL-0 27.85 93.95

Example 5 Recapitulation of HIO Phenotype

To test whether over-expression of At2g28630 causes a high seed oil phenotype, oil content in seeds from transgenic plants over-expressing this gene was compared with oil content in seeds from non-transgenic control plants. To do this, At2g28630 was cloned into a plant transformation vector behind the seed specific CsVMV promoter and transformed into Arabidopsis plants using the floral dip method. The plant transformation vector contains the nptII gene driven by the RE4 promoter, to provide resistance to kanamyacin, and serve as a selectable marker Seed from the transformed plants were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin. After 7 days, transgenic plants were identified as healthy green plants and transplanted to soil. Non-transgenic control plants were germinated on agar medium, allowed to grow for 7 days and then transplanted to soil. Twenty-two transgenic seedlings and 10 non-transgenic control plants were transplanted to random positions in the same 32 cell flat. The plants were grown to maturity, allowed to self-fertilize and set seed. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from tech plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 4. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

The effect of over-expression of At2g28630 on seed oil has been tested in six experiments. In 4 experiments, the plants over-expressing At2g28630 had higher seed oil content than the control plants grown in the same flat. Across the experiments, the average seed oil content of plants over-expressing At2g28630 was 2.6% greater than the untransformed controls. The seed oil content in plants over-expressing At2g28630 was significantly greater than non-taansgenic control plants (two-way ANOVA; P=0.0297).

TABLE 4 Relative Predicted value Experiment Plant ID Transgene average average 1 DX01869001 CsVMV:At2g28630 41.41 104.26 1 DX01869002 CsVMV:At2g28630 41.87 105.42 1 DX01869003 CsVMV:At2g28630 41.48 104.44 1 DX01869004 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.66 102.37 1 DX01869005 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.57 102.15 1 DX01869006 CsVMV:At2g28630 39.63 99.79 1 DX01869007 CsVMV:At2g28630 41.03 103.31 1 DX01869008 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.73 102.55 1 DX01869009 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.77 102.66 1 DX01869010 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.33 101.56 1 DX01869011 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.03 100.79 1 DX01869012 CsVMV:At2g28630 41.19 103.72 1 DX01869013 CsVMV:At2g28630 40.56 102.13 1 DX01869014 CsVMV:At2g28630 37.68 94.87 1 DX01869015 CsVMV:At2g28630 39.33 99.04 1 DX01849001 None 37.75 95.04 1 DX01849002 None 39.76 100.11 1 DX01849003 None 40.31 101.49 1 DX01849004 None 40.40 101.74 1 DX01849005 None 40.46 101.89 1 DX01849006 None 41.06 103.40 1 DX01849007 None 40.87 102.92 1 DX01849008 None 37.10 93.41 2 Z004182001 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.40 95.24 2 Z004182002 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.13 91.28 2 Z004182003 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.54 101.95 2 Z004182004 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.88 106.16 2 Z004182005 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.62 105.33 2 Z004182006 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.55 111.40 2 Z004182007 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.32 101.27 2 Z004182008 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.54 101.97 2 Z004182009 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.10 103.72 2 Z004182010 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.23 104.11 2 Z004182011 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.45 104.82 2 Z004182012 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.11 97.48 2 Z004182013 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.30 104.34 2 Z004182014 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.49 98.68 2 Z004182015 CsVMV:At2g28630 36.69 114.95 2 Z004182016 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.76 108.91 2 Z004182017 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.00 106.53 2 Z004182018 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.50 111.24 2 Z004182019 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.38 107.73 2 Z004182020 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.12 110.04 2 Z004182021 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.32 104.39 2 Z004182022 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.80 105.92 2 Z004198001 None 31.51 98.72 2 Z004198002 None 30.62 95.94 2 Z004198003 None 32.85 102.94 2 Z004198004 None 32.90 103.08 2 Z004198005 None 31.46 98.57 2 Z004198006 None 31.63 99.12 2 Z004198007 None 33.29 104.31 2 Z004198008 None 34.92 109.42 2 Z004198009 None 30.12 94.38 2 Z004198010 None 30.31 94.97 3 Z004183001 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.40 107.43 3 Z004183002 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.50 101.30 3 Z004183003 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.82 111.99 3 Z004183004 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.51 114.19 3 Z004183005 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.51 114.21 3 Z004183006 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.84 99.20 3 Z004183007 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.04 112.70 3 Z004183008 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.28 113.48 3 Z004183009 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.47 101.22 3 Z004183010 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.99 112.53 3 Z004183011 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.29 97.42 3 Z004183012 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.62 104.91 3 Z004183013 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.45 97.92 3 Z004183014 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.31 100.71 3 Z004183015 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.31 107.13 3 Z004183016 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.45 97.94 3 Z004183017 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.23 103.66 3 Z004183018 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.58 101.57 3 Z004183019 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.84 105.64 3 Z004183020 CsVMV:At2g28630 34.85 112.09 3 Z004183021 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.63 101.71 3 Z004183022 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.40 104.20 3 Z004199001 None 28.91 92.97 3 Z004199002 None 31.13 100.12 3 Z004199003 None 31.49 101.27 3 Z004199004 None 29.81 95.88 3 Z004199005 None 32.65 105.01 3 Z004199006 None 33.51 107.77 3 Z004199007 None 30.84 99.18 3 Z004199008 None 31.30 100.65 3 Z004199009 None 30.20 97.15 4 DX06647001 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.19 98.92 4 DX06647002 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.93 104.62 4 DX06647003 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.20 98.94 4 DX06647004 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.08 101.83 4 DX06647005 CsVMV:At2g28630 35.62 116.70 4 DX06647006 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.66 103.74 4 DX06647007 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.16 108.64 4 DX06647008 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.58 110.01 4 DX06647009 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.74 110.52 4 DX06647010 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.32 99.33 4 DX06647011 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.57 106.71 4 DX06647012 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.59 100.23 4 DX06666001 None 31.61 103.55 4 DX06666002 None 31.02 101.63 4 DX06666003 None 29.63 97.07 4 DX06666004 None 29.45 96.49 4 DX06666005 None 31.88 104.46 4 DX06666006 None 32.66 106.98 4 DX06666007 None 30.26 99.14 4 DX06666008 None 30.88 101.18 4 DX06666009 None 29.11 95.36 4 DX06666010 None 28.74 94.14 5 DX06843001 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.81 110.13 5 DX06843002 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.87 96.49 5 DX06843003 CsVMV:At2g28630 25.69 88.96 5 DX06843004 CsVMV:At2g28630 25.29 87.57 5 DX06843005 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.73 96.03 5 DX06843006 CsVMV:At2g28630 32.06 111.00 5 DX06843007 CsVMV:At2g28630 26.60 92.09 5 DX06843008 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.65 95.75 5 DX06843009 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.82 106.71 5 DX06843010 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.62 102.56 5 DX06843011 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.34 108.51 5 DX06843012 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.87 96.52 5 DX06843013 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.55 95.41 5 DX06843014 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.64 106.09 5 DX06843016 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.33 105.00 5 DX06843017 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.92 96.68 5 DX06843018 CsVMV:At2g28630 28.07 97.19 5 DX06825001 None 28.93 100.18 5 DX06825002 None 34.13 118.19 5 DX06825003 None 32.84 113.70 5 DX06825004 None 28.03 97.06 5 DX06825005 None 26.18 90.63 5 DX06825006 None 28.60 99.03 5 DX06825007 None 27.16 94.04 5 DX06825008 None 28.83 99.83 5 DX06825009 None 26.79 92.75 5 DX06825010 None 27.32 94.59 6 DX06844001 CsVMV:At2g28630 28.60 94.68 6 DX06844002 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.65 101.45 6 DX06844003 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.32 110.29 6 DX06844004 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.43 97.41 6 DX06844005 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.54 104.39 6 DX06844006 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.37 97.21 6 DX06844007 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.55 104.44 6 DX06844008 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.60 91.36 6 DX06844009 CsVMV:At2g28630 28.92 95.74 6 DX06844010 CsVMV:At2g28630 31.35 103.77 6 DX06844011 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.45 97.49 6 DX06844012 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.11 99.66 6 DX06844014 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.67 101.52 6 DX06844015 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.11 96.34 6 DX06844016 CsVMV:At2g28630 28.09 92.99 6 DX06844017 CsVMV:At2g28630 33.38 110.49 6 DX06844018 CsVMV:At2g28630 30.15 99.81 6 DX06844019 CsVMV:At2g28630 27.87 92.24 6 DX06844020 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.61 98.02 6 DX06844021 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.12 96.40 6 DX06844022 CsVMV:At2g28630 29.58 97.92 6 DX06826001 None 31.80 105.27 6 DX06826002 None 29.53 97.76 6 DX06826003 None 28.06 92.90 6 DX06826004 None 28.68 94.94 6 DX06826005 None 28.99 95.95 6 DX06826006 None 36.13 119.58 6 DX06826007 None 28.10 93.02 6 DX06826008 None 30.50 100.95 6 DX06826009 None 30.66 101.48 6 DX06826010 None 29.65 98.15

Example 6

To determine if the high oil phenotype is passed to the next generation, seed from T2 seed from 8 plants grown in Experiment 2 were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin and allowed to germinate and grow for 7 days. These eight plants represent 8 different transformation events. Twenty-two kanamycin-resistant seedlings were transplanted to random positions within a 32 cell tray as described above. Ten non-transgenic control (Col-0) plants were also transplanted into the tray. The plants were grown to maturity, allowed to self-fertilize and set seed. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from each plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 5. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

Transgenic plants from 2 of the 8 transformation events tested had significantly more oil than the control plants grown in the same flat as determined by a T-est (p>0.05).

TABLE 5 Relative Ex- Predicted value T-test P periment Plant ID Parent average average value 1 DX07749001 Z004182015 35.97 109.05 0.0028 1 DX07749002 Z004182015 33.79 102.43 1 DX07749003 Z004182015 36.23 109.82 1 DX07749004 Z004182015 36.58 110.89 1 DX07749005 Z004182015 35.24 106.83 1 DX07749006 Z004182015 34.35 104.11 1 DX07749007 Z004182015 37.00 112.16 1 DX07749008 Z004182015 37.58 113.93 1 DX07749009 Z004182015 34.74 105.30 1 DX07749010 Z004182015 36.87 111.77 1 DX07749011 Z004182015 34.90 105.79 1 DX07749012 Z004182015 35.54 107.75 1 DX07749013 Z004182015 37.68 114.21 1 DX07749014 Z004182015 34.22 103.74 1 DX07749015 Z004182015 36.60 110.96 1 DX07749016 Z004182015 34.82 105.54 1 DX07749017 Z004182015 32.12 97.36 1 DX07749018 Z004182015 32.53 98.60 1 DX07749019 Z004182015 34.83 105.59 1 DX07749020 Z004182015 31.86 96.57 1 DX07749021 Z004182015 33.93 102.84 1 DX07749022 Z004182015 35.95 108.99 1 DX07765001 COL-0 32.84 99.55 1 DX07765002 COL-0 32.92 99.80 1 DX07765003 COL-0 29.95 90.79 1 DX07765004 COL-0 33.37 101.15 1 DX07765005 COL-0 33.22 100.70 1 DX07765006 COL-0 34.48 104.52 1 DX07765007 COL-0 31.64 95.90 1 DX07765008 COL-0 35.50 107.60 1 DX07765009 COL-0 31.56 95.67 1 DX07765010 COL-0 34.41 104.31 2 DX07750001 Z004182006 35.21 105.42 0.0032 2 DX07750002 Z004182006 36.56 109.47 2 DX07750003 Z004182006 33.62 100.67 2 DX07750004 Z004182006 35.30 105.70 2 DX07750005 Z004182006 34.44 103.11 2 DX07750006 Z004182006 36.23 108.47 2 DX07750007 Z004182006 35.76 107.05 2 DX07750008 Z004182006 33.27 99.61 2 DX07750009 Z004182006 35.53 106.37 2 DX07750010 Z004182006 37.42 112.05 2 DX07750011 Z004182006 35.16 105.26 2 DX07750012 Z004182006 33.25 99.54 2 DX07750013 Z004182006 35.50 106.29 2 DX07750014 Z004182006 36.16 108.27 2 DX07750015 Z004182006 34.94 104.61 2 DX07750016 Z004182006 35.54 106.41 2 DX07750017 Z004182006 35.59 106.56 2 DX07750018 Z004182006 32.83 98.29 2 DX07750019 Z004182006 36.50 109.28 2 DX07750020 Z004182006 33.54 100.42 2 DX07750021 Z004182006 34.62 103.66 2 DX07750022 Z004182006 37.02 110.83 2 DX07766001 COL-0 32.64 97.71 2 DX07766002 COL-0 30.97 92.71 2 DX07766003 COL-0 33.53 100.39 2 DX07766004 COL-0 33.31 99.72 2 DX07766005 COL-0 34.65 103.74 2 DX07766006 COL-0 34.35 102.83 2 DX07766007 COL-0 34.49 103.25 2 DX07766008 COL-0 31.32 93.78 2 DX07766009 COL-0 33.74 101.01 2 DX07766010 COL-0 35.02 104.86

Example 7 Recapitulation of HIO Phenotype

To test whether over-expression of At3g48910 causes a high seed oil phenotype, oil content in seeds from transgenic plants over-expressing this gene was compared with oil content in seeds from non-transgenic control plants. To do this, At3g48910 was cloned into a plant transformation vector behind the seed specific CsVMV promoter and transformed into Arabidopsis plants using the floral dip method. The plant transformation vector contains the nptII gene driven by the RE4 promoter, to provide resistance to kanamyacin, and serve as a selectable marker. Seed from the transformed plants were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin. After 7 days, transgenic plants were identified as healthy green plants and transplanted to soil. Non-transgenic control plants were germinated on agar medium, allowed to grow for 7 days and then transplanted to soil. In the first 2 experiments, 15 transgenic plants were transplanted to soil along with 8 non-transgenic control plants. In the third experiment, twenty-two transgenic seedlings and 10 non-transgenic control plants were transplanted to random positions in the same 32 cell flat. The plants were grown to maturity, allowed to self-fertilize and set seed; however, some plants did not survive transplanting. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from each plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 6. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

The effect of over-expression of At3g48910 on seed oil has been tested in three experiments. In all three experiments, the plants over-expressing At3g48910 had higher seed oil content than the control plants grown in the same flat. Across the experiments, the average seed oil content of plants over-expressing At3g48910 was 8.5% greater than the untransformed controls. The seed oil content in plants over-expressing At3g48910 was significantly greater than non-tmmsgenic control plants (two-way ANOVA; P=0.0014).

TABLE 6 Pre- Relative dicted value Experiment Plant ID Transgene average average 1 DX02775001 CsVMV::At3g48910 38.84 126.54 1 DX02775002 CsVMV::At3g48910 37.74 122.98 1 DX02775003 CsVMV::At3g48910 35.77 116.56 1 DX02775004 CsVMV::At3g48910 32.72 106.63 1 DX02775005 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.02 107.60 1 DX02775006 CsVMV::At3g48910 31.27 101.89 1 DX02775008 CsVMV::At3g48910 35.84 116.78 1 DX02775009 CsVMV::At3g48910 34.84 113.53 1 DX02775010 CsVMV::At3g48910 35.59 115.98 1 DX02774002 None 33.35 108.67 1 DX02774003 None 30.78 100.31 1 DX02774004 None 30.88 100.61 1 DX02774005 None 31.07 101.24 1 DX02774006 None 28.25 92.05 1 DX02774007 None 26.57 86.58 1 DX02774008 None 33.11 107.88 2 DX02861001 CsVMV::At3g48910 36.82 113.46 2 DX02861002 CsVMV::At3g48910 32.50 100.13 2 DX02861003 CsVMV::At3g48910 34.56 106.50 2 DX02861004 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.65 103.68 2 DX02861005 CsVMV::At3g48910 36.04 111.07 2 DX02861006 CsVMV::At3g48910 35.33 108.87 2 DX02861008 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.55 103.39 2 DX02861010 CsVMV::At3g48910 36.64 112.90 2 DX02861011 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.24 102.42 2 DX02861012 CsVMV::At3g48910 34.99 107.82 2 DX02861013 CsVMV::At3g48910 27.83 85.76 2 DX02862001 None 32.49 100.12 2 DX02862002 None 33.11 102.03 2 DX02862003 None 35.12 108.22 2 DX02862004 None 31.55 97.21 2 DX02862005 None 32.26 99.42 2 DX02862006 None 32.92 101.44 2 DX02862007 None 29.78 91.75 2 DX02862008 None 32.39 99.81 3 DX06633001 CsVMV::At3g48910 34.21 115.58 3 DX06633002 CsVMV::At3g48910 29.16 98.53 3 DX06633003 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.57 113.42 3 DX06633004 CsVMV::At3g48910 31.56 106.64 3 DX06633005 CsVMV::At3g48910 30.02 101.43 3 DX06633006 CsVMV::At3g48910 28.40 95.95 3 DX06633007 CsVMV::At3g48910 35.45 119.80 3 DX06633008 CsVMV::At3g48910 33.86 114.40 3 DX06633009 CsVMV::At3g48910 31.65 106.95 3 DX06633010 CsVMV::At3g48910 27.91 94.30 3 DX06633011 CsVMV::At3g48910 30.63 103.50 3 DX06633012 CsVMV::At3g48910 34.74 117.37 3 DX06615001 None 27.71 93.64 3 DX06615002 None 28.04 94.73 3 DX06615003 None 31.24 105.55 3 DX06615004 None 32.51 109.84 3 DX06615005 None 27.95 94.44 3 DX06615006 None 29.57 99.90 3 DX06615007 None 31.05 104.91 3 DX06615008 None 31.19 105.39 3 DX06615009 None 29.04 98.13 3 DX06615010 None 27.66 93.46

Example 8

To determine if the high oil phenotype is passed to the next generation, seed from 12 seed from 7 plants grown in Experiment 1 were plated on agar medium containing kanamycin and allowed to germinate and grow for 7 days. These eight plants represent 8 different transformation events. Twenty-two kanamycin-resistant seedlings were transplanted to random positions within a 32 cell tray as described above. Ten non-transgenic control (Col-0) plants were also transplanted into the tray. The plants were grown to maturity, allowed to self-fertilize and set seed. Seed was harvested from each plant and its oil content estimated by Near Infrared (NIR) Spectroscopy using methods previously described. The percent oil in the seed harvested from each plant as determined by NIR spectroscopy is presented in Table 7. The Relative Oil value is determined by dividing the predicted oil value by the average oil value in control seed (i.e. seed from plants without the transgene).

Transgenic plants from 1 of the 7 transformation events tested had significantly more oil than the control plants grown in the same flat as determined by a T-test (p>0.05).

TABLE 7 Ex- Relative per- Predicted value T-test P iment Plant ID Parent average average value 1 DX07710001 DX02775002 35.24 113.01 0.003257 1 DX07710002 DX02775002 34.43 110.4 1 DX07710003 DX02775002 34.38 110.27 1 DX07710004 DX02775002 35.9 115.14 1 DX07710005 DX02775002 32.19 103.23 1 DX07710006 DX02775002 35.22 112.95 1 DX07710007 DX02775002 32.1 102.94 1 DX07710008 DX02775002 34 109.03 1 DX07710009 DX02775002 34.11 109.39 1 DX07710010 DX02775002 33.48 107.37 1 DX07710011 DX02775002 31.19 100.03 1 DX07710012 DX02775002 33.07 106.05 1 DX07710013 DX02775002 29.4 94.28 1 DX07710014 DX02775002 32.44 104.03 1 DX07710015 DX02775002 34.66 111.15 1 DX07710016 DX02775002 31.93 102.4 1 DX07710017 DX02775002 34.88 111.87 1 DX07710018 DX02775002 33.35 106.95 1 DX07710019 DX02775002 32.77 105.11 1 DX07710020 DX02775002 32.88 105.43 1 DX07710021 DX02775002 33.67 107.98 1 DX07710022 DX02775002 31.78 101.92 1 DX07724001 COL-0 33.34 106.91 1 DX07724002 COL-0 30.42 97.55 1 DX07724003 COL-0 28.61 91.74 1 DX07724004 COL-0 33.44 107.24 1 DX07724005 COL-0 32.95 105.66 1 DX07724006 COL-0 29.87 95.8 1 DX07724007 COL-0 29.69 95.23 1 DX07724008 COL-0 31.67 101.56 1 DX07724009 COL-0 30.37 97.39 1 DX07724010 COL-0 31.47 100.92

Example 9 Analysis of Arabidopsis HIO Sequence

Sequence analyses were performed with BLAST (Altschul et al., 1990, J. Mol. Biol. 215:403-410), PFAM (Bateman et al., 1999, Nucleic Acids Res 27:260-262), PSORT (Nakai K, and Horton P, 1999, Trends Biochem Sci 24:34-6), and/or CLUSTAL (Thompson J D et al., 1994, Nucleic Acids Res 22:4673-4680).

Example 10

Transformed explants of rapeseed, soy, corn, sunflower, cotton, cocoa, safflower, oil palm, coconut palm, flax, castor and peanut are obtained through Agrobacterium tumefaciens-mediated transformation or microparticle bombardment. Plants are regenerated from transformed tissue. The greenhouse grown plants are then analyzed for the gene of interest expression levels as well as oil levels.

Example 11

This example provides analytical procedures to determine oil and protein content, mass differences, amino acid composition, free amino acid levels, and micronutrient content of transgenic maize plants.

Oil levels (on a mass basis and as a percent of tissue weight) of first generation single corn kernels and dissected germ and endosperm are determined by low-resolution 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) (Tiwari et al., JAOCS, 51:104-109 (1974); or Rubel, JAOCS, 71:1057-1062 (1994)), whereby NMR relaxation times of single kernel samples are measured, and oil levels are calculated based on regression analysis using a standard curve generated from analysis of corn kernels with varying oil levels as determined gravimetrically following accelerated solvent extraction. One-way analysis of variance and the Student's T-test (JMP, version 4.04, SAS Institute Inc., Cary, N.C., USA) are performed to identify significant differences between transgenic and non-transgenic kernels as determined by transgene-specific PCR.

Oil levels and protein levels in second generation seed are determined by NIT spectroscopy, whereby NIT spectra of pooled seed samples harvested from individual plants are measured, and oil and protein levels are calculated based on regression analysis using a standard curve generated from analysis of corn kernels with varying oil or protein levels, as determined gravimetrically following accelerated solvent extraction or elemental (% N) analysis, respectively. One-way analysis of variance and the Student's T-test are performed to identify significant differences in oil (% kernel weight) and protein (% kernel weight) between seed from marker positive and marker negative plants.

The levels of free amino acids are analyzed from each of the transgenic events using the following procedure. Seeds from each of the transgenic plants are crushed individually into a fine powder and approximately 50 mg of the resulting powder is transferred to a pre-weighed centrifuge tube. The exact sample weight is recorded and 1.0 ml of 5% trichloroacetic acid is added to each sample tube. The samples are mixed at room temperature by vortex and then centrifuged for 15 minutes at 14,000 rpm on an Eppendorf microcentrifuge (Model 5415C, Brinkmann Instrument, Westbury, N.Y.). An aliquot of the supernatant is removed and analyzed by HPLC (Agilent 1100) using the procedure set forth in Agilent Technical Publication “Amino Acid Analysis Using the Zorbax Eclipse-AAA Columns and the Agilent 1100 HPLC,” Mar. 17, 2000.

Quantitative determination of total amino acids from corn is performed by the following method. Kernels are ground and approximately 60 mg of the resulting meal is acid-hydrolyzed using 6 N HCl under reflux at 100° C. for 24 hrs. Samples are dried and reconstituted in 0.1 N HCl followed by precolumn derivatization with α-phthalaldehyde (OPA0 for HPLC analysis. The amino acids are separated by a reverse-phase Zorbax Eclipse XDB-C18 HPLC column on an Agilent 1100 HPLC (Agilent, Palo Alto, Calif.). The amino acids are detected by fluorescence. Cysteine, proline, asparagine, glutamine, and tryptophan are not included in this amino acid screen (Henderson et al., “Rapid, Accurate, Sensitive and Reproducible HPLC Analysis of Amino acids, Amino Acid Analysis Using Zorbax Eclipse-AAA Columns and the Agilent 1100 HPLC,” Agilent Publication (2000); see, also, “Measurement of Acid-Stable Amino Acids,” AACC Method 07-01 (American Association of Cereal Chemists, Approved Methods, 9th edition (LCCC# 95-75308)). Total tryptophan is measured in corn kernels using an alkaline hydrolysis method as described (Approved Methods of the American Association of Cereal Chemists—10th edition, AACC ed, (2000) 07-20 Measurement of Tryptophan—Alakline Hydrolysis).

Tocopherol and tocotrienol levels in seeds are assayed by methods well-known in the art. Briefly, 10 mg of seed tissue are added to 1 g of microbeads (Biospec Product Inc, Barlesille, Okla.) in a sterile microfuge tube to which 500 μl 1% pyrogallol (Sigma Chemical Co., St Louis, Mo.)/ethanol have been added. The mixture is shaken for 3 minutes in a mini Beadbeater (Biospec) on “fast” speed, then filtered through a 0.2 μm filter into an autosampler tube. The filtered extracts are analyzed by HPLC using a Zorbax silica HPLC column (4.6 mm×250 mm) with a fluorescent detection, an excitation at 290 nm, an emission at 336 nm, and bandpass and slits. Solvent composition and running conditions are as listed below with solvent A as hexane and solvent B as methyl-t-butyl ether. The injection volume is 20 μl, the flow rate is 1.5 ml/minute and the run time is 12 minutes at 40° C. The solvent gradient is 90% solvent A, 10% solvent B for 10 minutes; 25% solvent A, 75% solvent B for 11 minutes; and 90% solvent A, 10% solvent B for 12 minutes. Tocopherol standards in 1% pyrogallol/ethanol are run for comparison (α-tocopherol, γ-tocopherol, β-tocopherol, δ-tocopherol, and tocopherol (tocol)). Standard curves for alpha, beta, delta, and gamma tocopherol are calculated using Chemstation software (Hewlett Packard). Tocotrienol standards in 1% pyrogallol/ethanol are run for comparison (α-tocotrienol, γ-tocotrienol, β-tocotrienol, δ-tocotrienol). Standard curves for α-, β-, δ-, and γ-tocotrienol are calculated using Chemstation software (Hewlett Packard).

Carotenoid levels within transgenic corn kernels are determined by a standard protocol (Craft, Meth. Enzymol., 213:185-205 (1992)). Plastiquinols and phylloquinones are determined by standard protocols (Threlfall et al., Methods in Enzymology, XVIII, part C, 369-396 (1971); and Ramadan et al., Eur. Food Res. Technol., 214(6):521-527 (2002)).

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Claims

1. A transgenic plant comprising a heterologous polynucleotide that encodes a HIO polypeptide having the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2 or an amino acid sequence having at least 95% sequence identity to the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2,

whereby the transgenic plant has a high oil phenotype relative to a plant of the same species that does not comprise the heterologous polynucleotide.

2. The transgenic plant of claim 1, which is selected from the group consisting of rapeseed, soy, corn, sunflower, cotton, cocoa, safflower, oil palm, coconut palm, flax, castor and peanut.

3. A plant part obtained from the plant according to claim 1.

4. The plant part of claim 3, which is a seed.

5. Meal, feed, or food produced from the seed of claim 4.

6. A method of producing oil comprising growing the transgenic plant of claim 1 and recovering oil from said plant.

7. The method of claim 6, wherein the oil is recovered from a seed of the plant.

8. A method of producing a plant having a high oil phenotype, said method comprising:

a) introducing into progenitor cells of the plant a heterologous polynucleotide that encodes a HIO polypeptide having the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2, or an amino acid sequence having at least 95% sequence identity to the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2; and
b) growing the transformed progenitor cells to produce a transgenic plant,
wherein said heterologous polynucleotide is expressed, and said transgenic plant exhibits a high oil content phenotype relative to a plant of the same species that does not comprise the heterologous polynucleotide.

9. A plant obtained by a method of claim 8.

10. The plant of claim 9, which is selected from the group consisting of rapeseed, soy, corn, sunflower, cotton, cocoa, safflower, oil palm, coconut palm, flax, castor and peanut.

11. A feed, meal, grain, food, or seed comprising a polypeptide encoded by the nucleic acid sequence as set forth in SEQ ID NO:1.

12. A feed, meal, grain, food, or seed comprising a polypeptide comprising an amino acid sequence as set forth in SEQ ID NO:2.

13. The transgenic plant of claim 1, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide having an amino acid sequence having at least 95% sequence identity to the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.

14. The transgenic plant of claim 13, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide having the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2.

15. The transgenic plant of claim 14, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide consisting of the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2.

16. The method claim 8, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide having an amino acid sequence having at least 95% sequence identity to the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.

17. The method of claim 16, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide having the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2.

18. The method of claim 17, wherein the heterologous polynucleotide encodes a HIO polypeptide consisting of the amino acid sequence set forth as SEQ ID NO: 2.

Referenced Cited
U.S. Patent Documents
5639790 June 17, 1997 Voelker et al.
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6248939 June 19, 2001 Leto et al.
Foreign Patent Documents
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Patent History
Patent number: 7851677
Type: Grant
Filed: Jun 28, 2005
Date of Patent: Dec 14, 2010
Patent Publication Number: 20090013436
Assignee: Agrinomics LLC (Portland, OR)
Inventors: John P. Davies (Portland, OR), Hein Tseong Ng (Beaverton, OR)
Primary Examiner: Elizabeth F McElwain
Attorney: Klarquist Sparkman, LLP.
Application Number: 11/631,239